44 results
Search Results
2. Scalar configuration, power strategies and water governance: insights from the politics of the Yangtze-to-Huai Water Transfer Project.
- Author
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Huang, Qidong, Zhang, Hairong, Xu, Jiajun, and Yang, Fang
- Subjects
WATER transfer ,WATER power ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,SEMI-structured interviews ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
The paper studies the decision-making process of the Yangtze-to-Huai Water Transfer Project (YHWTP) in China to explore how governments at various levels and the public respond to spatial and jurisdictional ambiguities inherent in the incomplete decentralization of water governance. Through participatory observations, semi-structured interviews and investigation of historical records of the project, we examine scalar strategies adopted by various groups at different stages. We find that within China's regionally decentralized authoritarian regime under centralized regulation, the scalar configurations as a result of the scalar strategies produce material consequence in the planning, designing and construction of inter-basin transfer projects. The use of such strategies transforms the existing scalar configuration, which provides a basis for further changes in the power structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Explaining the sustained public participation of ENGOs in China's water governance: A case study of the 'civilian river chiefs' under the theoretical framework of 'double embeddedness'.
- Author
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Wang, Raymond Yu, Peng, Ying, and Liu, Yi
- Subjects
NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,ENVIRONMENTAL organizations ,PARTICIPATION ,LEGITIMACY of governments - Abstract
Although essential to successful environmental governance, public participation has been sporadic and fragmented in China. Drawing on in-depth interviews conducted in the southern Chinese cities of Shenzhen and Guangzhou, this paper explores how environmental non-governmental organizations (ENGOs) have carried out 'civilian river chiefs' projects as novel approaches to water governance. We propose a framework of 'double embeddedness', within which ENGOs have built political and social legitimacy, reciprocity, and networks that enable their sustained participation in water governance. Our findings suggest that new patterns of state–community–non-governmental organization relationships are key to understanding public participation in China's future environmental governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Governing the water commons in China: from historical oriental despotism to contemporary fragmented hydraulic state.
- Author
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Zhang, Yan
- Subjects
WATER ,COMMON good ,COMMONS ,WATER supply - Abstract
This paper explores water commons and its governance in China. Neither oriental despotism nor fragmented hydraulic state accurately describes water governance in China. Instead, a combined approach of Grand Union governance logic and polycentric policy-making analysis is proposed. The paper argues that the concept of the commons in China is dual-dimensional, with a vertical dimension of public authority and a horizontal dimension of sharing-in-common; that power structures have often been flexible, adaptive, polycentric and highly experimental; and that, correctly applied, this approach also strives to serve the common good, ensuring positive impacts for shared prosperity, while mitigating negative impacts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Farmers' perceptions, adoption and impacts of integrated water management technology under changing climate.
- Author
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Zheng, Hongyun, Ma, Wanglin, Boansi, David, and Owusu, Victor
- Subjects
WATER management ,FURROW irrigation ,CLIMATE change ,OPERATING revenue ,FARMERS ,FERTIGATION ,MICROIRRIGATION - Abstract
This study investigates the correlations between Chinese banana farmers' perceptions of integrated water management technology (IWMT) and their adoption behaviours and examines the impact of IWMT adoption on farm performance. The results revealed that farmers' IWMT adoption correlates significantly with their perceptions of whether IWMT adoption can help reduce farm workload, fertilizer and water, the extent to which the technology is easier to operate, and the extent to which the technology can generate higher economic benefits than furrow irrigation technology. IWMT adoption significantly increases banana yields, gross revenue, net returns and irrigation frequency, but does not significantly affect irrigation expenditure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Mechanization in land preparation and irrigation water productivity: insights from rice production.
- Author
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Li, Junpeng, Ma, Wanglin, Botero-R, Julio Cesar, and Quoc Luu, Phong
- Subjects
IRRIGATION water ,MECHANIZATION ,ECONOMIC surveys ,REGRESSION analysis ,QUANTILES - Abstract
This study investigates how and to what extent mechanization in land preparation (MLP) can help improve irrigation water productivity (IWP) (measured as rice yield per unit volume of irrigation water). We employed an endogenous treatment regression model to estimate the 2021 China Land Economic Survey (CLES) data collected from Jiangsu province, China. The results reveal that MLP adoption increases IWP significantly; a higher IWP is determined by whether or not farmers adopt MLP rather than through which channel they access their farm machines; the effects of MLP adoption on IWP are monotonically increasing across the selected quantiles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Lake management organizations in China.
- Author
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Shen, Dajun and Jin, Min
- Subjects
LAKE management ,WATERSHEDS ,LAKES ,RIVER bifurcation ,ECOSYSTEM management - Abstract
The paper analyses the range of lake management organizations (LMOs) established in China and proposes management recommendations for different lake types and contexts. Based on functions, regional coverage and sectoral focus, nine LMO patterns are identified, ranging from existing agency approaches in which there is no specific lake focus or institutional responsibility to comprehensive and powerful lake basin authorities. LMO development in China faces many challenges, including a preoccupation with organizational form rather than function and objectives, duplication with existing agency functions, and insufficient lake basin management and trans-jurisdictional coordination. We therefore propose that LMOs should be tailored to specific situations and problems, drawing distinctions between plateau, urban, plain, inland and wetland lakes as well as other contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Unfolding the complexity in water reallocation decision-making in the Heihe River Basin, China.
- Author
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Wei, Yongping, Wu, Shuanglei, Lu, Zhixiang, Ison, Ray, Western, Andrew, and Sivapalan, Murugesu
- Subjects
DECISION making ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,SYSTEMS theory ,ECONOMIC development ,ENVIRONMENTAL regulations - Abstract
Water reallocation decision-making is a challenge faced by most river basins around the world. In this study, a system thinking framework was developed to structurally unfold the complex interactions of water reallocations with societal, economic and ecological subsystems in the Heihe River Basin in China. The results indicate that ecological degradations appeared much later than economic development. Slow-changing societal values and limited considerations of technological development and government regulations towards environmental protection contributed to the weak and untimely responses of water reallocations to ecological degradation. This framework can assist in strategic water reallocation decision-making in river basins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Seeing beyond negotiations: the impacts of the Belt and Road on Sino-Kazakh transboundary water management.
- Author
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Brassett, Justin, Akmadi, Moldir, and Sternberg, Troy
- Subjects
TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,WATER management ,NEGOTIATION ,BELT & Road Initiative ,WATER supply - Abstract
China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and infrastructural development has led to growing concerns regarding the future of Central Asia's water resources. However, few attempts have been made to assess the impacts this will have on specific transboundary basins within the region. This article explores how the context of the BRI transcends its physical impacts within the Ili and Irtysh basins, creating a sanctioned discourse that forecloses the possibility of 'successful' negotiations at an official level. As such, pathways to transboundary water management that exist beyond the negotiations are shown to have greater plausibility and potential effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Reviewing the causes of Mekong drought before and during 2019–20.
- Author
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Keovilignavong, Oulavanh, Nguyen, Tuong Huy, and Hirsch, Philip
- Subjects
DROUGHT management ,DROUGHTS ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,NON-state actors (International relations) ,RESEARCH institutes ,DAMS - Abstract
The Mekong region experienced severe droughts in 2019–20, generating alternative explanations of whether Chinese dams, climate or other drivers are the main causes. Reviewing academic journals, news outlets and online public discussions, we argue that it is important to address these differences in explanations not only between China and downstream countries but also including non-state actors, regional and external non-governmental organizations, media, think tanks, and research institutes to reveal the politics that frame the scientific debate on drought in the region. Data-sharing and collaborative research are needed to shift the discourse on drought towards a more systematic approach rather than focusing on politically expedient causal factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Making a water market intermediary: the China Water Exchange.
- Author
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Jiang, Min, Webber, Michael, Barnett, Jon, Zhang, Wenjing, and Liu, Gang
- Subjects
INSTITUTIONAL cooperation ,CARBON offsetting - Abstract
Market intermediaries play a crucial role in stitching together necessary actors for effective systems of exchange. However, there is limited understanding of how intermediaries emerge, and contribute to, water market development. This article explains how the China Water Exchange, the country's first and only national-level water trading platform, was catalysed by a top-down imperative consistent with China's water governance reform path. It shows how its genesis, objectives and functions reflect the congruence of goals between its key actors, and their struggles and efforts to build trust. Our focus on interorganizational dynamics adds a new perspective to understanding water market intermediaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. How does the Chinese government improve connectivity in water governance? A qualitative systematic review.
- Author
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Liu, Tao, Zhang, Wenya, and Wang, Raymond Yu
- Subjects
COST effectiveness ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
This article presents a qualitative systematic review of English-language academic articles on approaches adopted by the Chinese government to overcome fragmentation and disconnection in water governance. We find that the Chinese government has deployed technical, institutional and discursive instruments, ranging from 'hard' to 'soft' ways, to improve connectivity between different administrative levels, functional agencies and territorially based units. Although these approaches are conducive to reconciling conflicts, boosting collaboration and bridging gaps in interjurisdictional, cross-level and cross-sectoral interactions, they also have unexpected implications for cost-effectiveness, practicality and sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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13. Water futures along China's Belt and Road Initiative in Central Asia.
- Author
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Davies, Melinda and Matthews, Nathanial
- Subjects
BELT & Road Initiative ,WATER supply ,WATER management ,TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,WATER security - Abstract
China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is anticipated to have wide-ranging impacts on the countries of Central Asia. This includes a significant impact to a complex and fragile water resources landscape, and the closely entwined economic, social, environmental and political context. Water resources considerations are currently not explicit in BRI policies or proposals, despite the vast variety of ways in which the initiative may interact with and influence these dynamics. This article presents an early examination of the key trade-offs and interdependencies across water management in the BRI and it includes recommendations to mitigate detrimental impact and promote sustainable delivery for the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Rethinking livelihood resilience after development-induced displacement and resettlement: a case study of Qianping Reservoir.
- Author
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Gong, Yichun, Yao, Kaiwen, Zhang, Ruilian, Liu, Bingwen, and Wang, Feilong
- Subjects
INVOLUNTARY relocation ,LAND settlement ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
To explore the livelihood problems following development-induced displacement and resettlement, this article selects 234 affected families of the Qianping Reservoir in China and builds a livelihood resilience inferred measurement model to assess and verify their livelihood resilience. The research shows that households that have a reasonable income structure or that resettled near their original residence have higher livelihood resilience. Moreover, the proportion of agricultural income and physical capital have the most significant impact on livelihood resilience compared with other socio-economic indicators. These findings can help individuals make better preparations in advance and guide governments to do well in assistance after resettlement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Improved water management is central to solving the water-energy-food trilemma in Lao PDR.
- Author
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McCartney, Matthew and Brunner, Jake
- Subjects
WATER management ,BELT & Road Initiative ,GREEN infrastructure ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,INFRASTRUCTURE funds - Abstract
Relying on published literature, we reviewed water-energy-food issues in Lao PDR in the context of a policy shift to more sustainable 'green growth' and significantly increased infrastructure investment resulting from China's Belt and Road Initiative. The BRI provides the prospect for the country to address its infrastructure deficit and transform from a 'land-locked' to a 'land-linked' country. However, great care is needed to ensure that future investments do not result in further environmental degradation and harm to communities. An integrated 'nexus' approach, in which enhanced water management is central, is a prerequisite for more inclusive and sustainable development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Is three a crowd? River basin institutions and the governance of the Mekong River.
- Author
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Williams, Jessica M.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,CROWDS ,DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
The Mekong River is important for South-East Asia, where it is shared by six countries and serves 70 million people. Its sensitive ecology is essential for the region's well-being. Managing the river for economic development while protecting this ecology is challenging. This article investigates the institutions in place for governing the Mekong, as how they interact is significant for the region's future. Institutional and state discourses regarding the Mekong and its institutions are analyzed to examine the relationships between them and with the Mekong nations, and the effects they may have on the sustainable future of the Mekong. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Innovative and transformative water policy and management in China.
- Author
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Wang, Yahua, Wu, Xun, and Tortajada, Cecilia
- Subjects
WATER management ,WATER supply ,CIVIL society ,RESOURCE management ,BEST practices - Abstract
China has made substantial progress in transforming water governance to respond to water crises and to support rapid socio-economic development. We aim to critically and comprehensively analyze important innovations in managerial approaches, as well as new developments and associated challenges in water policies, by bringing together cutting-edge research and best practices on water resources management in contemporary China. The key lessons drawn from the transformation include improving relationships among government, market and civil society in terms of water governance, as well as introducing innovative solutions to water challenges according to the specific contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Public–private partnerships in the water sector in China: a comparative analysis.
- Author
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Qian, Neng, House, Schuyler, Wu, Alfred M., and Wu, Xun
- Subjects
PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MUNICIPAL water supply ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
China has emerged as one of the world's most active markets for public–private partnerships (PPP) in the water sector, while the pace of such development globally has slowed in recent years. This article investigates the dynamics of the development of PPP projects in the Chinese water sector through comparative case studies. Our findings suggest that the unwavering pursuit of PPPs as a policy instrument by the central government, water sector reforms and the effective implementation of local governments are among key factors driving the impressive growth of PPP projects in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. How to promote effective irrigation pricing reform in northern China? Insights from the Taocheng District.
- Author
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Chen, Sicheng, Wang, Yahua, and Svensson, Jesper
- Subjects
POLICY diffusion ,IRRIGATION ,REFORMS ,POWER (Social sciences) ,WATER management - Abstract
There has been a growing interest in understanding the enabling conditions for the adoption of irrigation pricing reform worldwide. We enrich the literature on policy diffusion by comparing the effects of different mobilization patterns in northern China, showing how differences in incentives have hampered or fostered the spread of a collect-and-refund policy in Taocheng District. We find that the mobilization pattern of water authorities, with limited fiscal resources and weak political influence, provided little incentive for local authorities to adopt the policy. By contrast, the mobilization pattern of government chiefs mobilized local authorities to spread the policy across larger scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A portfolio of China's urban water governance sector: administrative system, coordination problems and policy evolution.
- Author
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Jia, Shaofeng, Li, Dalong, and Wang, Raymond Yu
- Subjects
MUNICIPAL water supply ,URBAN planning ,WATERSHEDS ,BIOLOGICAL evolution - Abstract
Urban water governance in China has received increasing academic and policy attention owing to frequent urban water crises. Drawing on documentary analysis and field investigations, this article analyzes the administrative system and recent policy developments vis-à-vis urban water governance in China. It demonstrates the main problems of, and mechanisms for, interdepartmental and interjurisdictional coordination, and reviews new policy instruments addressing urgent urban water governance issues. The article argues that coordination mechanisms such as the river chief system are promising but their long-term effectiveness remains to be clarified, and more attention should be paid to policy enforcement and market mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Joint analysis of water rights trading and water-saving management contracts in China.
- Author
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Guo, Hui, Chen, Xiangdong, Liu, Jiahong, Zhang, Hongjiang, and Svensson, Jesper
- Subjects
MANAGEMENT contracts ,WATER rights ,WATER analysis ,COMMERCE ,WATER management - Abstract
Water rights trading and water-saving management contracts are important market-oriented means to promote water conservation. This study integrates them together for a joint analysis, and puts forward a new way to optimize market-oriented water-saving services in China. This is to establish a water-saving management contracts-based water rights trading mechanism, that is, to allow trading of water saved under a management contract. We have two main findings. First, water-saving management contracts and water rights trading are highly compatible and interrelated. Second, water rights trading can be integrated into the implementation of water-saving management contracts and thereby promote their application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Water use control system in China.
- Author
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Shen, Dajun, Guna, Ali, and He, Xiaodan
- Subjects
WATER use ,WATERSHEDS ,HERBICIDE application ,TIME measurements - Abstract
China is developing a complicated three-aspect water use control system. Spatially, the system includes river basin, province, prefecture, county, permit, and individual users; temporally, it consists of annual average and annual/seasonal frameworks; and in terms of management objectives, it combines abstraction, consumption and use. Technical consistency is required in volume, space, timing, management and reliability. Application in the Yellow River basin reveals consistency problems in targets, indicators, timings and control periods. We suggest improving the system by addressing temporal and spatial inconsistencies, reforming management systems and procedures, strengthening research, and developing a water accounting system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Groundwater irrigation and management in northern China: status, trends, and challenges.
- Author
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Wang, Jinxia, Jiang, Yuting, Wang, Huimin, Huang, Qiuqiong, and Deng, Hongbo
- Subjects
IRRIGATION management ,GROUNDWATER management ,WATER supply ,WATER quality ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
This study uses panel data from the North China Water Resources Survey in 2004 and 2016 to update the status of groundwater. In the past two decades, groundwater irrigation has spread to more villages, but declining groundwater tables and deterioration in water quality have become more serious. Some policy measures (well-drilling permits, water quotas, water resources fees) have been implemented in an increasing number of villages, but they still only reached a small fraction of villages. Some of the responses by farmers to these challenges have accelerated groundwater extraction. Policy efforts are needed to improve the effectiveness of policy implementation and enhance sustainable groundwater use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The Chinese characteristics of payments for ecosystem services: a conceptual analysis of water eco-compensation mechanisms.
- Author
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Wang, Raymond Yu, Ng, Cho Nam, and Qi, Xiaoxing
- Subjects
PAYMENTS for ecosystem services ,WATER analysis ,POLLUTION control industry - Abstract
The applications of payments for ecosystem/environmental services (PES) are diverse. However, the changing characteristics of these applications in different contexts have not been adequately elucidated. This article provides a conceptual analysis of China's water eco-compensation mechanism (ECM), a notion reported in the PES literature, through the lens of public–private, state–market, central–local and interjurisdictional relationships. It argues that the water ECM is essentially a state-centric utilitarian approach to mediating regional conflicts and inequalities. The Chinese practices of water ECM indicate an alternative approach to incentive-based conservation, highlighting the potential of integrating government-led instruments with market-oriented mechanisms in the development of a PES framework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Sustainability of water and energy use for food production based on optimal allocation of agricultural irrigation water.
- Author
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Li, Mo and Singh, Vijay P.
- Subjects
WATER use ,CALORIC content of foods ,IRRIGATION farming ,FOOD production ,WATER rights ,IRRIGATION water ,AGRICULTURAL water supply - Abstract
Food security is inextricably linked with water and energy use in irrigated agriculture. This article develops an optimization model to evaluate the sustainability of water and energy use for food production, and the coordination among water, energy and carbon footprints. A case study of Heping Irrigation District, China, demonstrates the applicability of the model. We find that 87.47, 86.12, and 83.67 million m
3 of irrigation water allocation are sustainable for high, normal, and low flow levels, respectively, considering economic, social and environmental benefits. The structure of surface water and groundwater allocation remains consistent for different subareas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. City storm-flood events in China, 1984–2015.
- Author
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Lü, Aifeng, Liu, Wenhua, Zhu, Wenbin, Jia, Shaofeng, Li, Yuanyuan, Yan, Jiabao, Liang, Yuan, Xiang, Xiaozhi, and Guan, Zilong
- Subjects
STORM surges ,FLOODS ,FLOOD risk ,URBAN runoff management ,DRAINAGE ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
This study uses web-based information to explore the spatial and temporal trends of reported city flood events for all mainland China cities from 1984 to 2015. Panel data were compiled on flooding (or the lack thereof) within China's cities for every year in this period, and the relationship between the annual number of cities with reported flood events and possible influencing variables was analyzed. Few cities experienced flood events before 2001, but this situation then increased dramatically after 2010. In 2015, approximately 60% of China's cities experienced a storm-flood event, which is three times as many as the government estimated in 2011. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. How could water markets like Australia's work in China?
- Author
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Lewis, David and Zheng, Hang
- Subjects
WATER management ,MARKETS ,WATER rights ,WATER use ,IRRIGATION - Abstract
What hurdles lie in the path of the Chinese government's plan to introduce water trading? This question is addressed by reviewing lessons from establishing water markets in Australia, and then assessing an early scheme to create them in China. In Australia, markets in water opened up over several decades, with gradual recognition of what was needed to avoid negative third-party effects. Trading there is now crucial: in drought years nearly half the water used by farmers is traded. Australia's experience throws light on the key requirements for a water market – though markets in China will, naturally, be fashioned to suit its own conditions. The pilot work by Tsinghua University in Gansu Province has led the way in having trading at the local level in China. Compared with Australia, however, rights are not as tradeable, metering is poor, and plots are tiny. Trading has mostly been by water user associations, made up of several hundred farmers, but this dampens the incentives that make markets effective – and can upset individual farmers. Possible ways past these hurdles are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Groundwater regulation in case of overdraft: national groundwater policy implementation in north-west China.
- Author
-
Aarnoudse, Eefje, Bluemling, Bettina, Qu, Wei, and Herzfeld, Thomas
- Subjects
GROUNDWATER management ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,FEDERAL government ,GOVERNMENT policy ,WATER laws - Abstract
This article analyzes why China's national groundwater policy is implemented in a fragmented way. The question is addressed through a comparative case-study analysis of groundwater management in north-west China. The analysis focuses on the institutional context in which local government agencies responsible for groundwater management operate. It was found that direct pressure from the central government promotes policy implementation. Yet, the distribution of surface and groundwater management responsibilities over different government agencies also influences the importance attached to groundwater regulation. In a conjunctive-use setting the integration of surface water and groundwater management facilitates effective groundwater regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. China's domestic hydropolitics: an assessment and implications for international transboundary dynamics.
- Author
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Moore, Scott
- Subjects
TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,LAW of the sea ,WATER boundaries ,FREEDOM of the seas ,INTERNATIONAL conflict ,LAW - Abstract
This article reviews the dynamics of conflict and cooperation between sub-national administrative jurisdictions in China, and assesses the implications of these dynamics for its transboundary waterways. The article argues that domestic hydropolitics can rival the international variety in both complexity and contentiousness. This is especially true in China because of its marked fiscal-economic decentralization, which creates considerable interjurisdictional conflict. These internal politics may help explain tension between China and its neighbours over transboundary rivers, and future research should attempt to more fully link the domestic and international arenas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Powering or sharing water in the Brahmaputra River basin.
- Author
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Barua, Anamika, Vij, Sumit, and Rahman, Mirza Zulfiqur
- Subjects
DAMS ,TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,WATER boundaries ,INTERNATIONAL conflict ,LAW - Abstract
This article examines the power interplay that shapes the transboundary water interaction in the Brahmaputra River basin. The article provides two key insights based on data sharing and bilateralism aspects. First, the lack of a standard, hydrological data-sharing mechanism has created a sense of mistrust between riparians. Second, bilateralism and power asymmetry between the riparian countries has created a sense of unilateral control over the Brahmaputra River. This article concludes that due to regional geopolitics, issues of sovereignty, and unequal power, negotiation for a multilateral basin-wide treaty at this moment is a non-starter in the Brahmaputra basin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Intergovernmental cooperation on the Amur River basin management in the twenty-first century.
- Author
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Simonov, Eugene and Egidarev, Eugene
- Subjects
DAMS ,TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,LAW of the sea ,WATER boundaries ,INTERNATIONAL conflict ,LAW - Abstract
This article describes several important topics in river management relationships between the Chinese, Mongolian and Russian governments, such as hydropower, water transfer and flood control, to illustrate various less known aspects of transboundary river basin management patterns in the Amur River basin. This is intended to establish a baseline account of transboundary water management in this shared river basin in the wake of major changes dictated by China's wider transboundary and domestic policies such as the Belt and Road Initiative and Ecological Civilization and to consider to what extent the emerging shifts in environmental and development policies have already been manifested in cooperation on the transboundary river. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Using transboundary environmental security to manage the Mekong River: China and South-East Asian Countries.
- Author
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Grumbine, R. Edward
- Subjects
TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,WATER boundaries ,INTERNATIONAL conflict ,RIVER ecology ,LAW - Abstract
Environmental security, broadly defined as integrated analysis of the social and ecological aspects of environmental problems, is gaining influence as nations begin to expand beyond traditional conceptions of national security. The Mekong River basin provides an instructive example of challenges to the evolution of environmental security in Asia. An overview of six main security stressors -- ecosystem degradation, food, energy, water, development, and climate change -- reveals the need for transboundary governance reform. China may be in a position to undertake new leadership in the Mekong, which could result in more cooperation, but only if that leadership embraces more deliberative and inclusive behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. China's dam-builders: their role in transboundary river management in South-East Asia.
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Siciliano, Giuseppina, and Nordensvard, Johan
- Subjects
TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,LAW of the sea ,WATER boundaries ,FREEDOM of the seas ,LAW - Abstract
This article investigates China's role as the world's largest builder of and investor in large dams, focussing on the Greater Mekong Sub- Region in South-East Asia. It addresses the role Chinese actors play in dam-building as well as the environmental, social, economic and political implications by drawing on case studies from Cambodia and Vietnam. The article finds that China's dam-building is perceived very differently in different countries of South-East Asia. In Cambodia, the dams in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region are considered instruments of economic growth and development, whereas downstream in Vietnam the dams are seen as potentially undermining national growth, development and security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A process-based framework to examine China's approach to transboundary water management.
- Author
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Hongzhou Zhang and Mingjiang Li
- Subjects
TRANSBOUNDARY waters ,LAW of the sea ,WATER boundaries ,FREEDOM of the seas ,LAW - Abstract
As China emerges as a regional and global power and its interest in utilizing the transboundary water resources within its borders continues to grow, a better understanding of China's policies and practices towards transboundary waters is of critical importance. Scholars have explored various approaches to the study of this subject, including the legal perspective, the socioeconomic-environmental lens, the foreign relations/neighbourhood diplomacy angle, and international relations theories. Each approach has its merits and weaknesses. On the basis of all the existing analytical studies, this article proposes a process-based framework to study China's policies towards transboundary water management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Governance of the Sponge City Programme in China with Wuhan as a case study.
- Author
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Dai, Liping, van Rijswick, Helena F. M. W., Driessen, Peter P. J., and Keessen, Andrea M.
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,FLOODS ,URBAN planning ,NATURAL disasters ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
In 2015, China’s national government initiated a Sponge City Programme to address its urban flood issues. A sponge city is a city built around the concept of managing water in an ecologically sustainable way. The intention is to improve urban resilience through rainwater capture, storage and use. This article applies a four-mode governance framework to analyze the programme. It identifies the strengths and weaknesses of the programme implementation and provides recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Exposure and resilience of China’s cities to floods and droughts: a double-edged sword.
- Author
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Cai, Jialiang, Kummu, Matti, Niva, Venla, Guillaume, Joseph H. A., and Varis, Olli
- Subjects
DROUGHTS ,FLOODS ,NATURAL disasters ,URBANIZATION ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
China’s rapid urbanization in areas prone to flood or drought events can be seen as a double-edged sword. Urbanization enlarges the population exposed to these hazards, but the resulting socio-economic development also helps build resilience. This article quantifies flood occurrence, drought severity, and related resilience in 81 cities in Mainland China. The extent of flood exposure was notable, both in absolute terms as well as in relation to the drought-prone urban population. China needs to integrate urban flood/drought policy making with sustainable urbanization policy making to best contribute to minimizing flood and drought risks in its cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Water resources research to support a sustainable China.
- Author
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Li, Peiyue and Qian, Hui
- Subjects
WATER supply ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,CLIMATE change ,SCARCITY - Abstract
Water resources are the basis for the sustainable development of China. However, the country is currently facing alarming water-related problems associated with its fast economic development and climate change. This editorial introduces briefly the status of its water resources research at the national level and the researcher level. It also introduces the research reported in this thematic issue to highlight its role in addressing flood and water-scarcity issues, improving water management in inland plains and supporting the sustainable development of the country. Finally, some further recommendations for improving water resources research in China are offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Participatory water management and adoption of micro-irrigation systems: smallholder farmers in arid north-western China.
- Author
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Fan, Yubing, Park, Seong, and Nan, Zhibiao
- Subjects
WATER management ,IRRIGATION ,FARMERS ,AGRICULTURE ,WATER conservation - Abstract
This study investigates smallholder farmers’ participation in and knowledge of village-based water user associations in north-western China, and analyzes their interplay with membership in water associations and installation and application of micro-irrigation systems. Using farmer survey data, a multivariate probit model is built to analyze the effects of influential factors. Results show significant effects of farmers’ perceptions of water shortage and its causes, attitudes to water conservation, village-based information, and incentives on the membership in water user associations and installation and application of micro-irrigation. Policies promoting micro-irrigation adoption should target decentralized water management and facilitate farmers’ participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Resettlement for the Danjiangkou Dam heightening project in China: planning, implementation and effects.
- Author
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Yan, Dengcai, Shi, Guoqing, Hu, Zijiang, and Wang, Haibao
- Subjects
LAND settlement ,AGRICULTURAL policy ,FEDERAL government ,CENTRAL economic planning ,DAMS ,SOCIAL impact ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This article examines the planning, implementation and effects of resettlement for the Danjiangkou Dam Heightening Project. In the process of planning, the local government took full account of the long-term development of resettlers. In the process of implementation, resettlers could obtain compensation, subsidy, follow-up support and counterpart support. Their living and production conditions greatly improved after resettlement. The following factors contributed to successful resettlement: a development model of industry supporting agriculture; commitment of the central government; adequate funding; sound organizational systems; efficient government management mechanisms at various levels; and the favourable geographical location of the resettlement site. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Unpacking water conflicts: a reinterpretation of coordination problems in China’s water-governance system.
- Author
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Wang, Raymond Yu, Ng, Cho Nam, Lenzer, James Hans, Dang, Heping, Liu, Tao, and Yao, Shenjun
- Subjects
WATER diversion ,CONFLICT management ,WATER shortages ,ECONOMIC development ,CHINESE politics & government ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
In China, water conflicts have been traditionally framed as the external costs of economic development and tackled with technocratic measures. This study examines water conflicts through the lens of water diversion, water allocation and water functional zoning. It reframes water conflicts as a result of coordination problems nested in complex inter-jurisdictional interactions. With a game-theoretic illustration, it identifies that individual and group heterogeneities are two challenges to effective coordination. It argues that China’s state-centric water institutions are tailored to optimize overall social utilities, yet they constrain coordination due to insufficient costs and benefits redistribution mechanisms at the local level. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Will the energy industry drain the water used for agricultural irrigation in the Yellow River basin?
- Author
-
Xiang, Xiaozhi, Svensson, Jesper, and Jia, Shaofeng
- Subjects
ENERGY industries ,IRRIGATION ,WATER use ,AGRICULTURE ,WATER conservation - Abstract
This article employs the case of the Yellow River basin to advance understanding of the water–energy–food nexus by demonstrating how the country’s energy and agriculture sectors are competing for limited water supplies and by quantifying the future water demands in the two sectors. The results show that in 2030 the water demands for food and energy are likely to increase by less than 4 km3and 1 km3, respectively, in the Yellow River basin. The analysis suggests that agricultural water savings and inter-basin water transfers are the main ways to ensure sufficient water flows through the basin to fulfil demand for both sectors while preserving the natural ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The effectiveness of small-to-medium river basin organizations in China: a case study of the Erhai Lake Basin Management Commission.
- Author
-
Jianping, Wang and Haizhou, Ma
- Subjects
WATERSHEDS ,RIVERS ,DECISION making ,ENVIRONMENTAL organizations ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Drawing on empirical evidence from a case study conducted in the upper Mekong catchment, this article assesses the performance of the Erhai Lake Basin Management Commission, an organization mandated to control pollution and integrate the diverse interests of those individuals and communities living and working near Erhai Lake. Clear local rules, strong enforcement, practical protocols, clear responsibilities and extensive mobilization have been crucial to the success of this small river basin organization. However, the insufficient involvement of numerous important stakeholders in decision-making processes has decreased the commission’s capacity to address water issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Post-1980 water policy in China.
- Author
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Shen, Dajun
- Subjects
WATER supply ,WATER supply management ,WATER resources development ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article reviews water policy in China since 1980. Four periods are considered: the 1980s, 1990–1998, 1998–2009 and after 2009. Based on an introduction of the broader context and the main water issues in each period, the key water policies are discussed and analyzed. Since 1980, China's water policies have experienced dramatic changes: trying to improve benefits in the face of criticism for low efficiency in the 1980s; allocating large investments acknowledging the important role of water for the economy of the country during 1990–1998; redefining the water–human relationship during 1998–2008; and providing the strictest water resources management as the definitive solution after 2009. The article presents a full range of policy solutions from infrastructure construction to non-structural instruments and from water resources development to water resources management. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. From principles to localized implementation: villagers' experiences of IWRM in the Shiyang River basin, Northwest China.
- Author
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Yu, Haiyan, Edmunds, Mike, Lora-Wainwright, Anna, and Thomas, Dave
- Subjects
WATER resources development ,SENSORY perception ,GEOLOGICAL basins ,POLITICAL trust (in government) ,STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
Understanding perceptions of resource users and influencing factors that affect these perceptions has significant value in evaluating the success or failure of IWRM (integrated water resource management) reforms. This article explores villagers' experiences of China's recent powerful enforcement of IWRM and the locally perceived impacts through three in-depth case studies. Results show that neither villagers' perspectives nor the implementation processes and outcomes are monolithic. Political trust plays a key role in shaping villagers' perspectives and responses towards IWRM, which is constantly shaped and reshaped by understanding, experiences and negotiation among different stakeholders in the embedded physical, socio-economic and political environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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